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Quilt by Charlotte Patera - Square Dance (42in X 42in)
Charlotte Patera is a well-known American quilter, designer, and author in the art quilting and applique world, especially active from the 1970s onward.
She is best known for her work in reverse applique techniques and for helping popularize “mola-inspired” quilting in contemporary fiber art.
What she’s known for
Charlotte Patera’s quilting style and career center on a few key areas:
1. Mola-inspired quilting
She studied and adapted design ideas from the Kuna people of Panama, whose traditional “mola” textiles use layered fabric and cut-away reverse applique. Patera translated those ideas into quilting techniques for Western fabric artists.
2. Reverse applique innovation
She became widely recognized for teaching and writing about:
- Layered fabric construction
- Cutting through stacked fabrics to reveal color beneath
- Complex but structured geometric and figurative designs
3. Books and teaching
She has authored several influential quilting books, including:
- Mola Techniques for Today’s Quilters (1995)
- Cutwork Appliqué
- Schoolhouse Appliqué: Reverse Techniques and More
These books are still referenced in quilting education because they clearly explain her layered construction methods.
4. Influence in quilt art circles
She is considered part of the early generation of “art quilt” educators who treated quilting as a fine-art discipline rather than only traditional craft. She also worked as a graphic designer and contributed patterns and projects to magazines like Woman’s Day and Good Housekeeping.
Why she matters in quilting history
Her work helped bridge:
- traditional folk textile techniques (like mola)
- modern art quilting
- magazine-era DIY craft culture in the U.S.
That combination made her especially influential for quilters interested in surface design, abstraction, and experimental applique.





